You just come back after candy getting hours. Why waste treat time tricky. That’s what sugar rushes are for
Comment on When kids come trick-or-treating, what happens if I choose trick?
A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 2 days agoBut is it ever happening this way?
Do people really answer “trick” when asked?
Or rather anything from “no treat, sorry” to “fuck off you lousy brats”?
How does the ritual continue then? What do the kids answer?
And then, do they vandalize that person’s property, usually, or are there other types of tricks?
Do they do it immediately, or do they circle back later, secretly?
Slatlun@lemmy.ml 1 day ago
Seleni@lemmy.world 1 day ago
It used to! Kids would steal wood, break down fences, take outdoor furniture, and use it to build a big bonfire in the center of their towns. They would egg houses and run wild.
Modern trick-or-treating and Halloween parties were invented to counter this destructive behavior, actually. Tasting History did a pretty cool episode on it.
A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 1 day ago
That’s the impression I’m getting overall. From the presumably USian comments - for those that got Halloween via the US, it probably never was.
The video tells an amazing story (starts about 6min in, ends at about 16min in). Apparently Halloween as it was in the 19th century was a mix of traditions from different cultures, partly even the result of culture clash. And the introduction of candy was aimed at placating the little rowdies, invented by ladies that remind me of the temperance movement.
In light of that we should celebrated those kids that still cling to the old, rebellious ways!
Seriously though, most cultures have traditions of at least one day per year where mischief is allowed, and I like it.
Bonus, from the video:
halloween masked kids
🔖